Thomas Paine spotlighted at 2026 independence anniversary celebrations, symbolizing resistance to modern elite power.
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The Nation column urges 2026 semiquincentennial celebrations to spotlight Thomas Paine

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With the United States preparing to mark 250 years since independence, a January 2, 2026 opinion essay in The Nation argues that Thomas Paine’s anti-monarchical, egalitarian message should be central to the anniversary observances, casting it as a rebuttal to modern political and economic power concentrated among elites.

The United States is set to observe the 250th anniversary of independence in 2026, a milestone that has revived arguments about how the country should frame its founding story.

In a January 2, 2026 opinion essay in The Nation, writer John Nichols calls for making the semiquincentennial a “Year of Thomas Paine,” pointing to the Revolutionary-era pamphleteer as a symbol of popular resistance to both monarchy and concentrated wealth. Nichols describes Paine as a figure who helped rally support for independence and who later criticized what he viewed as elite power in America.

Nichols contrasts Paine’s politics with what he portrays as contemporary movements advocating “capitalism without constraint,” Christian nationalism and other forms of nationalist or expansionist politics—labeling them modern “Tories” and arguing they echo the kind of deference to monarchical authority that independence-era activists rejected.

The essay also draws on founding-era language to underscore a theory of government rooted in popular sovereignty, quoting the Declaration of Independence’s premise that governments derive “their just powers from the consent of the governed,” and that people may change a government that becomes destructive of their rights.

Nichols highlights Paine’s attacks on hereditary monarchy in Common Sense. Paine wrote that the origins of kingship could often be traced to violence and plunder, describing the first of modern kings as “nothing better than the principal ruffian of some restless gang.” In the same work, Paine also argued that “one honest man” was worth more than “all the crowned ruffians that ever lived.”

To support a broader argument that the founding generation feared entrenched privilege, Nichols cites James Madison’s later warning about corporations. In an 1827 letter to James K. Paulding, Madison wrote that incorporated companies “may in particular cases, be useful,” but “are at best a necessary evil only,” adding that “monopolies and perpetuities” were “objects of just abhorrence.”

The essay also invokes Thomas Jefferson’s 1802 letter to the Danbury Baptist Association, which contains the phrase “wall of separation between Church & State,” to argue against efforts to define the United States as a Christian nation.

Nichols concludes by quoting another passage from Common Sense in which Paine urged readers to oppose oppression: “O ye that love mankind! Ye that dare oppose, not only the tyranny, but the tyrant, stand forth!” Nichols argues that the message should inform modern debates about democracy, rights and power as the country heads into its next 250 years.

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Initial reactions on X to The Nation's column advocating Thomas Paine's centrality in 2026 semiquincentennial celebrations are sparse and mostly promotional from the publication itself, framing it as opposition to oligarchs and monarchical elites. User shares echo this view, with one expressing preference for Paine over Marx and another questioning the term 'retro royalists.' No widespread debate or negative sentiments observed.

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Large crowd of protesters at a nationwide 'No Kings' demonstration opposing Trump administration policies, with signs and flags in a city setting.
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Nationwide No Kings protests target Trump administration policies

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Organizers expect millions of Americans to join over 2,500 protests across all 50 states on October 18, 2025, opposing what they see as authoritarian actions by the Trump administration. The demonstrations, led by a coalition including Indivisible, focus on National Guard deployments to cities and intensified ICE raids. Republicans criticize the events as unpatriotic and funded by external interests.

In a tribune in Le Monde, former ecologist deputy Noël Mamère warns of resemblances between France and the United States in law and political rhetoric. From Paris, Minneapolis events reflect America's two faces: historical violence and non-violent civil disobedience. This highlights a crucial choice between trumpism and justice values.

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In a tribune for Le Monde, historian François-Xavier Petit argues that France's public discourse remains anchored in 1945, while the world has radically changed with the Anthropocene. He contends that the first defeat of this era is not climate change itself, but our inability to rethink a happy life beyond outdated modernization paradigms.

Zohran Mamdani was sworn in as New York City’s mayor on January 1, 2026, after a campaign focused on affordability and public services. A recent commentary in The Nation argues that his administration should learn from the mixed legacy of former mayor John V. Lindsay, whose 1966–1973 tenure combined major liberal ambitions with political and economic vulnerabilities that later helped expose city programs to retrenchment.

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On the occasion of its 200th anniversary, Le Figaro, in partnership with the Institut Choiseul, has selected 200 young people aged 35 or under poised to shape France's future in various fields. This initiative is part of the celebrations at the Grand Palais on January 14, 15, and 16, 2026. It aims to highlight the hope carried by these future leaders in economy, culture, politics, and more.

The Nation published an OppArt entry on October 28, 2025, titled "Russ Vought, Project 2025’s Architect of Destruction," credited to Peter Kuper and Anonymous, with the image captioned "Anonymous [photo by Peter Kuper]."

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The growing polarization in the French National Assembly contrasts with the relative calm observed in society, according to political scientists. A recent study reveals a 'parliamentary fever' marked by emotional rhetoric since 2017. Researchers question the mechanisms of universal suffrage that distort the image of the people.

 

 

 

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